beer Club Featured In

About the Beer

Like all of the great beer styles of the world, Scotch Ale owes its character to the terroir of its original place of origin. In the case of true Scotch
ales, there were two key geographical factors that determined the flavor of the beer. First, the remoteness of Edinburgh from the hop growing counties of
England meant that there was an economic incentive to make a very low hopped beer. Secondly, the very soft Edinburgh water, readily tapped via an aquifer
running along a geological fault line from Holyrood Palace to the city, was ideal for bringing out the best in darker, malty beers.

Meantime Scotch Ale has been brewed to an authentic recipe specifically for the Rare Beer Club in the United States. However, you may come across some
small quantities that crop up at the Greenwich Union, if you know the right people to ask, that is. 8.0% ABV, made with delicately colored malts, Perle and
Spalter hops. It is a fine expression of malt in beer.

About the Beer

Like all of the great beer styles of the world, Scotch Ale owes its character to the terroir of its original place of origin. In the case of true Scotch
ales, there were two key geographical factors that determined the flavor of the beer. First, the remoteness of Edinburgh from the hop growing counties of
England meant that there was an economic incentive to make a very low hopped beer. Secondly, the very soft Edinburgh water, readily tapped via an aquifer
running along a geological fault line from Holyrood Palace to the city, was ideal for bringing out the best in darker, malty beers.

Meantime Scotch Ale has been brewed to an authentic recipe specifically for the Rare Beer Club in the United States. However, you may come across some
small quantities that crop up at the Greenwich Union, if you know the right people to ask, that is. 8.0% ABV, made with delicately colored malts, Perle and
Spalter hops. It is a fine expression of malt in beer.

The BeerHunter’s Earliest Encounter with Scotch Ale

Scotland’s capital, Edinburgh, is one of the world’s most beautiful cities. At 18, I moved there to take a job on a newspaper. I was too young to
appreciate the place. Being of an age at which most people are in college, I spent most of my leisure time drinking. Back then, Edinburgh was one of the
world’s great brewing cities. I kept discovering new beers, and each seemed better than the last.

But as fast as I discovered them, they vanished. Breweries were going down like ninepins in the early 1960s. I sometimes wondered if I had really tasted a
beer called Fowler’s Prestonpans Wee Heavy? Or was it all a dream? It wasn’t. I had, and it was one of the best ales I’d ever tasted.
As the breweries vanished, so did I. Breaking my journey in my native Yorkshire for a pint or three of Sam Smith’s, I headed for London to seek my fame and
fortune.

A decade or so later, Alastair Hook arrived in Edinburgh to study brewing at Heriot-Watt University. He also studied at York University, and even at
Weihenstephan. He claims that my Pocket Guide to Beer inspired him to become a brewer.

I met Alastair for the first time in 1991. He was 27, and had been hired to set up a brewpub in Ashford, the last English town on the Channel Tunnel
railway. The brewery was in a pub that had been converted into a nightclub. It was felt that the young customers would want lager, not ale.

Alastair brewed a Vienna Lager, the first example of that style ever to have been brewed in Britain. It is a style of lager for which I have long
campaigned. This brewery was the first British micro to produce lager.
He had never been written about in a national newspaper, until I wrote a half-page story in the “Food and Drink” section of The Independent. I have been
writing about him ever since.

He still produces that Vienna lager, at his Meantime Brewery, in Greenwich, London. And when I yearn for Prestonpans, I seek out his Scotch Ale.

The BeerHunter’s Earliest Encounter with Scotch Ale

Scotland’s capital, Edinburgh, is one of the world’s most beautiful cities. At 18, I moved there to take a job on a newspaper. I was too young to
appreciate the place. Being of an age at which most people are in college, I spent most of my leisure time drinking. Back then, Edinburgh was one of the
world’s great brewing cities. I kept discovering new beers, and each seemed better than the last.

But as fast as I discovered them, they vanished. Breweries were going down like ninepins in the early 1960s. I sometimes wondered if I had really tasted a
beer called Fowler’s Prestonpans Wee Heavy? Or was it all a dream? It wasn’t. I had, and it was one of the best ales I’d ever tasted.
As the breweries vanished, so did I. Breaking my journey in my native Yorkshire for a pint or three of Sam Smith’s, I headed for London to seek my fame and
fortune.

A decade or so later, Alastair Hook arrived in Edinburgh to study brewing at Heriot-Watt University. He also studied at York University, and even at
Weihenstephan. He claims that my Pocket Guide to Beer inspired him to become a brewer.

I met Alastair for the first time in 1991. He was 27, and had been hired to set up a brewpub in Ashford, the last English town on the Channel Tunnel
railway. The brewery was in a pub that had been converted into a nightclub. It was felt that the young customers would want lager, not ale.

Alastair brewed a Vienna Lager, the first example of that style ever to have been brewed in Britain. It is a style of lager for which I have long
campaigned. This brewery was the first British micro to produce lager.
He had never been written about in a national newspaper, until I wrote a half-page story in the “Food and Drink” section of The Independent. I have been
writing about him ever since.

He still produces that Vienna lager, at his Meantime Brewery, in Greenwich, London. And when I yearn for Prestonpans, I seek out his Scotch Ale.